A country gentleman who owned land in the Staffordshire potteries, Heathcote briefly represented Stoke-on-Trent as a Reformer, but did not find the reformed Commons to his liking. Heathcote had inherited the family seat, Longton Hall, from his father Sir John Edensor Heathcote in 1822, which he extensively and expensively remodelled soon after.
Heathcote was elected for Coventry in 1826, but his support for Catholic emancipation was unpopular and compelled his retirement in 1830.
Heathcote described himself as ‘a Reformer, but no revolutionist’, a view which echoed that of Charles Dod.
Although he did not seek to re-enter Parliament, Heathcote nominated Liberal candidates for Stoke in 1837 and 1841, and also attended some anti-corn law meetings in the Potteries.
